Temporal scales, sampling designs and age distributions in marine conservation palaeobiology

Author:

Tomašových Adam1ORCID,Dominici Stefano2ORCID,Nawrot Rafał3ORCID,Zuschin Martin3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Earth Science Institute, Slovak Academy of Sciences, Bratislava 84005, Slovakia

2. Museo di Storia Naturale, Università degli Studi di Firenze, Via La Pira 4, Firenze 50121, Italy

3. Department of Palaeontology, University of Vienna, Josef-Holaubek-Platz 2, 1090 Vienna, Austria

Abstract

AbstractConservation palaeobiology informs conservation and restoration of ecosystems by using the fossil record to discriminate between baseline and novel states and to assess ecosystem response to perturbations. Variability in the time-scale of palaeobiological data can generate patterns that either exaggerate or mute the magnitude of biotic changes. We identify two approaches that remedy the challenges associated with the mixing of baseline and post-impact states and with the transformation of the stratigraphic depth to time. First, combining surface death assemblages with both (1) fossil assemblages preserved in the subsurface historical layers and (2) living assemblages can better resolve the nature of ecosystem shifts than within-core surveys or live–dead analyses alone. Second, post-mortem age distributions of skeletal particles and their preservation states are not only informative about stratigraphic resolution and time averaging of death assemblages but also about the timing of changes in abundance of skeletal producers. High abundance of the youngest age cohorts in surface death assemblages is a null expectation of disintegration and burial dynamic. When this dynamic is accounted for, age distributions of benthic invertebrates from Holocene sediments often reveal high volatility, prolonged turn-offs in production or pervasive regime shifts that are obscured in the raw stratigraphic record.

Funder

Vedecká Grantová Agentúra MŠVVaŠ SR a SAV

Agentúra na Podporu Výskumu a Vývoja

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

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